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Reinventing the British film industry: the Group Production Plan and the National Lottery Franchise Scheme
Authors:James Caterer
Institution:1. Department of Film Studies, School of Arts and Humanities, Richard Hamilton Building, Headington Hill Campus , Oxford Brookes University , Oxford, OX3 0BP, UK jcaterer@brookes.ac.uk
Abstract:This article is a comparative analysis of two analogous attempts to restructure the British film industry: the Group Production Plan of the early 1950s and the National Lottery Franchises of the late 1990s. The Group Production Plan brought together key industry figures such as Michael Balcon and John Grierson, who endured a fraught working relationship. The Plan failed, largely due to indifference from the major combines, Rank and the Associated British Picture Company (ABPC). Forty‐five years later, the Lottery Franchises were criticised for failing to produce enough films, although the example of Pathé Pictures suggests that expectations were too high and resources too low. The economic theory of path dependence problematises the policy drive to create vertically integrated companies. This article concludes that historical precedent plays an insufficient role in British film policy discourse and that academic research in cultural policy should aim to improve the dialogue between the past and the present.
Keywords:film policy  British cinema  National Lottery  vertical integration  historical precedent
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